He is clearly working on not bringing the ball down, on getting the whole motion up higher. It looks a little clunky right now, but I do find it promising that they're basically starting him over and saying, let's just get this right from scratch. I expect him to be a bad shooter this upcoming season, and to revert to bad habits sometimes. But if he can rebuild completely, and it works out, the end results could be a dramatic change.
Yeah, it's a 2-3 year project. I wish they had started last summer - it was obvious this would make or break his superstar ceiling - but better late than never I guess.
Amen is a lot bigger dude .... he actually reminds me of a young Lebron in many ways. Big, strong, fast, high IQ and good at everything .... except shooting.
Man, I was just about to say the exact same thing!! It looks very smooth. He may not ever be the best shooter on the team but it's a very good chance he can become the best player; length, IQ, handles, defense, and possible scoring....he checks all the boxes
LeBron came into the league as a primary ball handler. Bron came in with a significantly larger "bag" and handling package at age 18. Amen's handles are rather weak for a guard and rather mid for a wing. LeBron had really good handles for a guard as a rookie.
Lebron had much better instincts at other scoring means than 3 point shooting. I see him as a Lonzo type but more physical and worse at shooting.
https://www.espn.com/nba/insider/st...res-2024-2025-victor-wembanyama-chet-holmgren ahead of chet, brandon miller, scoot, etc
Anyone know of any good articles on the data behind improved jumpers? Like, I want to see how many bad shooters actually became good. It feels like not a lot. I only remember Jason Kidd of the top of my head being a bad shooter but becoming a good one.
Well Scott Barnes shot like 28 percent from 3 his second season, last year he improved to 34 percent on just under 5 attempts. Obviously Amen's much worse somehow than 28 percent but it's a good example.
Magic Johnson was an absolutely terrible 3-point shooter for most of his career before figuring it out near the end. Seriously, it was kinda weird how he flipped the switch.